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NEK5 activity regulates the mesenchymal and migratory phenotype in breast cancer cells

Authors :
David H. Drewry
Carrow I. Wells
Maryl K. Wright
Gabrielle O. Windsor
T Van Hoang
Henri Wathieu
Thomas J. Yan
Bridgette M. Collins-Burow
Tiffany R. Chang
Madlin Alzoubi
Matthew E. Burow
Kenneth P. Nephew
Margarite D. Matossian
Aaron Buechlein
Sean Lee
Nirav Kapadia
Fang Fang
Steven Elliott
William J. Zuercher
Alifiani B. Hartono
Hope E. Burks
Source :
Breast cancer research and treatment. 189(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: Breast cancer remains a prominent global disease affecting women worldwide despite the emergence of novel therapeutic regimens. Metastasis is responsible for most cancer-related deaths, and acquisition of a mesenchymal and migratory cancer cell phenotypes contributes to this devastating disease. The utilization of kinase targets in drug discovery have revolutionized the field of cancer research but despite impressive advancements in kinase-targeting drugs, a large portion of the human kinome remains under-studied in cancer. NEK5, a member of the Never-in-mitosis kinase family, is an example of such an understudied kinase. Here, we characterized the function of NEK5 in breast cancer. Methods: Stably overexpressing NEK5 cell lines (MCF-7) and shRNA knockdown cell lines (MDA-MB-231, TU-BcX-4IC) were utilized. Cell morphology changes were evaluated using immunofluorescence and quantification of cytoskeletal components. Cell proliferation was assessed by Ki-67 staining and transwell migration assays tested cell migration capabilities. In vivo experiments with murine models were necessary to demonstrate NEK5 function in breast cancer tumor growth and metastasis. Results: NEK5 activation altered breast cancer cell morphology and promoted cell migration independent of effects on cell proliferation. NEK5 overexpression or knockdown does not alter tumor growth kinetics but promotes or suppresses metastatic potential in a cell type specific manner, respectively. Conclusion: While NEK5 activity modulated cytoskeletal changes and cell motility, NEK5 activity affected cell seeding capabilities but not metastatic colonization or proliferation in vivo. Here we characterized NEK5 function in breast cancer systems and we implicate NEK5 in regulating specific steps of metastatic progression.

Details

ISSN :
15737217
Volume :
189
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Breast cancer research and treatment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a12aed8aff808a816f7c844e1dadb28f